The Journal of Pain
Volume 10, Issue 4 , Pages 426-435, April 2009

Contribution of the Periaqueductal Gray to the Suppression of Pain Affect Produced by Administration of Morphine Into the Intralaminar Thalamus of Rat

Department of Psychology, Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Program, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan

Received 26 August 2008; received in revised form 17 October 2008; accepted 17 October 2008. published online 23 February 2009.

Abstract 

The parafascicular nucleus (nPf) of the intralaminar thalamus is implicated in the processing of pain affect in both animals and humans. Administration of morphine into nPf results in preferential suppression of the affective reaction to noxious tail shock in rats. The involvement of the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray in mediating the antinociceptive action of morphine injected into nPf was evaluated. Vocalizations that occur after tail shock offset (vocalization afterdischarges) are a validated rodent model of pain affect and were preferentially suppressed by injection of morphine into nPf. Vocalizations that occur during tail shock were suppressed to a lesser degree, whereas spinal motor reflexes (tail flick and hind limb movements) were unaffected by injection of morphine into nPf. Inactivation of the vPAG via the microinjection of muscimol (GABAA agonist) produced dose-dependent antagonism of morphine-induced increases in vocalization thresholds. The results demonstrate that a functional link between the nPf and vPAG in generating the antinociceptive action of morphine injected into nPf.

Perspective

Microinjection of morphine into nucleus parafascicular preferentially suppressed rats' affective reaction to noxious stimulation. This affective analgesia was reversed by inactivation of the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray. Understanding the neurobiology underlying the suppression of pain affect will provide insights into new treatments for pain and its associated affective disorders.

Key words: Nucleus parafascicularis, ventrolateral periaqueductal gray, morphine, pain affect, vocalizations

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 Supported by grant R01 NS045720 from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).

PII: S1526-5900(08)00853-5

doi:10.1016/j.jpain.2008.10.011

The Journal of Pain
Volume 10, Issue 4 , Pages 426-435, April 2009